Seoul : Russia’s
foreign minister warned the U.S., South Korea and Japan against forming a
security partnership targeting North Korea as he visited his country's ally for
talks on further solidifying their booming military and other cooperation.
Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov spoke Saturday at North Korea's eastern Wonsan city,
where he met the country's leader, Kim Jong Un, and conveyed greetings from
President Vladimir Putin.
Kim during the meeting
reaffirmed his government’s commitment to “unconditionally support and
encourage all measures” taken by Russia in its conflict with Ukraine.
He said Pyongyang and
Moscow share identical views on “all strategic issues in conformity with the
level of alliance,” according to North Korea’s official Korean Central News
Agency.
Lavrov called for the
two countries to further strengthen their “strategic and tactical cooperation
and intensify concerted action” in international affairs, KCNA reported.
Relations between
Russia and North Korea have been flourishing in recent years, with North Korea
supplying troops and ammunition to support Russia’s war against Ukraine in
return for military and economic assistance.
That has raised
concerns among South Korea, the U.S. and others that Russia might also transfer
sensitive technologies to North Korea that can increase the danger of its
nuclear and missile programs.
Speaking with reporters
after a meeting with his North Korean counterpart Choe Son Hui, Lavrov accused
the U.S., South Korea and Japan of what he called military buildups around
North Korea.
“We warn against
exploiting these ties to build alliances directed against anyone, including North
Korea and, of course, Russia,” he said, according to Russia's state Tass news
agency.
The U.S., South Korea
and Japan have expanded or restored their trilateral military exercises in
response to North Korea’s advancing nuclear program. The three countries held a
joint air drill Friday involving U.S. nuclear-capable bombers near the Korean
Peninsula as their top military officers met in Seoul and urged North Korea to
cease all unlawful activities threatening regional security.
North Korea views major
U.S.-led military drills as invasion rehearsals and has long argued it is
forced to develop nuclear weapons to defend itself from U.S. military threats.
Russia understands
North Korea’s decision to seek nuclear weapons, Lavrov said. “The technologies
used by North Korea are the result of the work of its own scientists. We
respect North Korea’s aspirations and understand the reasons why it is pursuing
nuclear development,” Lavrov said, according to Tass.
During their meeting,
Choe reiterated North Korea “unconditionally” supports Russia’s fight against
Ukraine, as Lavrov repeated Russia’s gratitude for the contribution North
Korean troops made in efforts to repel a Ukrainian incursion into Russia’s
Kursk border region.
North Korea recently
opened a mammoth beach resort in Wonsan city, the meeting venue, that it says
can accommodate nearly 20,000 people. In his comments at the start of his
meeting with Choe, Lavrov said, “I am sure that Russian tourists will be
increasingly eager to come here.
We will do everything we can to facilitate
this, creating conditions for this, including air travel,” according to the
Russian Foreign Ministry.
The Wonsan-Kalma
tourist zone is at the center of Kim's push to boost tourism to improve his
country’s troubled economy. However, prospects for the tourist complex aren’t
clear as North Korea appears unlikely to fully reopen its borders and embrace
Western tourists anytime soon.